On what would have been the first day of the Open Compute Project's annual Global Summit, Western Digital is bringing out a new line of enterprise SSDs. The WD Gold brand for enterprise drives is getting an SSD counterpart to the existing WD Gold enterprise hard drives. WD's color-based drive branding now features both SSDs and hard drives in almost every product segment: Blue and Green mainstream consumer drives, Black for high-end consumer, Red for NAS systems, and Gold for enterprise. The only one missing an SSD option is the WD Purple family for video surveillance recording (though there is a WD Purple microSD card).

The new WD Gold SSD isn't anything new technologically; it's basically a re-branding of a portion of the Ultrastar DC SN640 product line. Where the WD Gold differs is in the target markets: Like other WD (color) products, the WD Gold SSD is intended for channel and retail sales rather than the large-scale direct B2B sales model used for Western Digital's Ultrastar datacenter drives and their client OEM drives. The WD Gold SSD will make Western Digital's enterprise SSD technology more accessible to small and medium enterprise customers.

Western Digital WD Gold SSDs
Capacity 960 GB 1.92 TB 3.84 TB 7.68 TB
Form Factor 2.5" U.2 7mm
Interface PCIe 3.0 x4, NVMe 1.3
Controller WD Proprietary
NAND 96-layer BICS4 3D TLC NAND
Sequential Read 3000 MB/s 3100 MB/s 3100 MB/s 3100 MB/s
Sequential Write 1100 MB/s 2000 MB/s 1800 MB/s 1800 MB/s
Random Read (4 kB) IOPS 413k 472k 469k 467k
Random Write (4 kB) IOPS 44k 63k 63k 65k
70/30 R/W Mixed IOPS 111k 194k 174k 187k
Power Active Configurable 10, 11, 12 W limit
Idle 4.6 W 4.62 W 4.94 W 4.95 W
Encryption AES-256
Power Loss Protection Yes
Write Endurance 1.4 PB
0.8 DWPD
2.8 PB
0.8 DWPD
5.61 PB
0.8 DWPD
11.21 PB
0.8 DWPD
Warranty Five years

The WD Gold SSD is based on the same hardware as the Ultrastar DC SN640 series, but the WD Gold product line doesn't include as many options. The SN640 comes in two endurance tiers: 0.8 drive writes per day and 2 DWPD. The WD Gold SSD line only includes the 0.8 DWPD drives, and only the U.2 form factor versions: a total of four capacity options from 960 GB up to 7.68 TB. These drives use the latest Western Digital/Kioxia 96-layer 3D TLC NAND flash memory and one of Western Digital's own in-house NVMe controller designs.

The technical specs for the WD Gold SSDs are identical to the matching Ultrastar DC SN640 models. The performance is limited largely by the PCIe 3.0 interface and the power/thermal constraints of the 2.5"/7mm U.2 form factor: these drives idle just under 5W and can draw up to 12 W under load, with configurable power states to throttle down to 10 or 11 W for high-density deployments that can't quite keep them cool at the full 12W each.

The WD Gold SSDs are planned to ship starting in early Q2. Pricing has not been announced.

Source: Western Digital

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  • ksec - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    I wonder if OTC Multilayer NAND could achieve similar price / GB ratio. I want NAND based NAS that is affordable.
  • Vorl - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    Without pricing there's really nothing of interest in the review. These drives are mediocre at best especially considering .8 DWPD. If they offered a good price, then that might be something.
  • shabby - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    Gold, enterprise, tlc.
    One of those doesn't belong.
  • Billy Tallis - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    The entire industry disagrees with you, and since the industry hasn't collapsed from rampant drive failures, they're probably right.
  • shabby - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    Then the prices better be identical to the consumer drives, I just expect higher end components to be used in enterprise gear.
  • PeachNCream - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    Agreed with you.
  • 12345 - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    .8 dwpd is more than double the endurance of most consuner tlc ssds. Write endurance costs a lot.
  • 12345 - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    Consumer*
  • PeachNCream - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link

    It really isn't different NAND though. Just the same stuff with a longer warranty on it and a markup for the higher risk of replacement for the higher risk for WD.
  • DyneCorp - Friday, March 6, 2020 - link

    @PeachNCream

    You have absolutely no idea what you’re talking about. Enterprise SSDs have massive amounts of over-provisioning in addition to completely different controller firmware.

    Please try again.

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